PHILADELPHIA — In the history of the NFL, no one has produced more touchdown passes in one game than Nick Foles did when he threw seven Sunday in Oakland.

That helped win the Eagles a game.

It did not win him a full-time, no-asterisk, permanent assignment as the Eagles’ starting quarterback, Chip Kelly said Monday.

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So what must Foles do? Throw eight? Throw nine? Throw a fit?

“He just needs to continue to play,” Kelly said at the NovaCare Complex Monday, “just like everybody else on this team.”

In a 49-20 victory over the Raiders, Foles completed 22 of 28 passes for 406 yards and was not intercepted. Technically, he was playing in place of Michael Vick, who continues to recover from a hamstring injury, though Kelly’s line between his No. 1 and No. 2 quarterbacks has been perforated all along.

Since Foles had played poorly and was concussed in his previous start, a 17-3 loss to the Cowboys, his effort Sunday was particularly stunning — yet not necessarily to Kelly.

“I’ve seen him in practice,” Kelly said. “I’ve seen him getting better and better. But, again, it is going out on the field and doing it. That’s why I think what happened in the Cowboys game was such a surprise to everybody, because that’s not what Nick expects out of himself, not what we expect out of him.

“I am just happy for him.”

Kelly acknowledged that Foles would receive the first-team reps in practice Tuesday, but was clear: It was only because Vick has yet to have been cleared by the trainers to practice. Kelly even said he can “cross my fingers” and hope for the return of Vick, and at one point diminished Foles’ performance, citing a “small sample size.”

“He played in the Giants game, he played in the Tampa Bay game, he played against the Cowboys,” Kelly said. “Now this. It’s encouraging, I can tell you that.”

Encouraging … but not convincing?

“If he needs anything to think about, he should think about what happened in the last couple weeks to him,” Kelly said. “It can change in a week. If you spend too much time dwelling on the past, then you’re probably doomed to repeat it. If you spend too much time patting yourself on the back, you’re probably in a bad situation, too.

“I think you can look at his short career in the last two or three weeks here to see how quickly it can go from one week to the next week. He went from NFC Player of the Week against Tampa Bay to not playing very well against the Cowboys to now coming back. He’s probably got a life full of lessons in the last three weeks.”

If anything, Kelly is consistent in his treatment of Foles: He did not give up on him after the collapse against Dallas, and he did not commit to him after his throw at NFL history in Oakland.

“What happened in the Cowboys game was the first time I’ve ever seen that from him,” Kelly said. “Let’s knock on wood. Let’s hope it’s the last time we ever see it from him.”